Skip to main content
. 2004 Apr 30;59(8):1661–1676. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2004.02.010

Table 2.

‘Promises kept (✓), promises broken (×)

Commitment Assessment
Support for international development goals, “including the overarching objective of reducing the share of the world's population living in extreme poverty to half its 1990 level by 2015” × Many IDG targets for 2015 will almost certainly not be achieved
Provision of debt relief under Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative Debt relief now being provided, but amount is often inadequate; Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper process seriously flawed; many heavily indebted countries not covered
Create the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria Current financial pledges far below need identified by Commission on Macroeconomics and Health
By 2010: reducing the number of HIV/AIDS-infected young people by 25 percent, reducing TB deaths and prevalence of the disease by 50 percent, and reducing the burden of disease associated with malaria by 50 percent × Resources almost certainly inadequate
Non-specific commitment to strong national health systems × Official development assistance (ODA) for health from all industrialized countries: $6 billion/year (less than one-quarter the needed amount as identified by Commission on Macroeconomics and Health); during three Summit years of study, ODA from G7 countries actually declined slightly
Recognize need for “flexibility” with respect to intellectual property protection in order to ensure availability of essential drugs Agreement now reached on interpretation of intellectual property provisions of WTO Agreement, but its significance remains uncertain
Non-specific commitments to supporting agriculture through ODA as an element of poverty reduction, to “target the most food-insecure regions, particularly Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia” × Few specifics, and no clear commitment to IDG of reducing underweight among children; recent slow progress in reducing undernutrition now reversed
Heavy emphasis on promoting biotechnology to increase agricultural productivity Appropriateness of such ‘solutions’ questionable
Clear support for Dakar Framework goals re: improving access to education by 2015 × Strong evidence that these goals will not be achieved